Carol R. M. Moss is an attorney with the firm and a member of its Litigation Practice Group. Carol's practice is focused in:
- Personal injury;
- Medical malpractice; and
- General litigation.
Carol focuses on serving individuals who have suffered an injury or lost a loved one. She is known for providing compassionate, caring services for her clients. Many of Carol’s clients are going through very difficult and emotional circumstances, so she works hard to advocate on their behalf and shoulders their burdens during these times.
For eight years prior to becoming an attorney, Carol was a litigation paralegal in the area of personal injury at a large Minneapolis firm, where she worked on many high profile cases. She has litigation experience ranging from the first client meeting through the end of trial. Her experience gives her the ability to look down the road and prepare her client’s case for the strongest position possible.
She believes that working in the legal profession is a privilege and that such skills should be used to benefit others and to make society better as a whole. Carol is a Commissioner for the City of Robbinsdale Human Rights Commission, which helps promote the goals of equal human rights, and provides pro bono legal work for victims of domestic violence.
Carol is licensed to practice law in the States of Minnesota and Wisconsin, the U.S. District Court for the District of Minnesota, and the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. Carol is a member of the Minnesota State Bar Association, Hennepin County Bar Association, Minnesota Association for Justice, and the American Association for Justice. She has authored articles for the Minnesota Association for Justice and the Minnesota State Bar Association.
After obtaining her juris doctor from Hamline University School of Law, Carol joined Hellmuth & Johnson, PLLC in 2008. At Hamline University, she earned the Presidential Scholarship and was on the Dean’s List. She was on the Board of Editors for the Hamline Law Review and authored the case note, You Do Know What You’re Doing? Right, Doc? Minnesota Supreme Court Contemplates Negligent Credentialing and Privileging, 30 Hamline L. Rev. 125 (2007).
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